I don't know any good way to say it, so I'll just be blunt, especially since I haven't really seen anything since the strike started on our progress, so I'll post it here.

Its over.

We're beat.

We have run out of money and the companies, sadly, are still pulling profits, as miniscule as they have become. Strikers are starting to leave the picket lines in search of other work. All three of our offers have been rejected and it is now painfully obvious that those people don't want to negotiate. Strike pay has been forced to be cut to $100 a week in my local. We can't hold out any longer. I wish I had some good news, but it looks like we're going to be going down in flames.

Please don't let our struggle have been in vain.

Let's get that madman out of the White House so that Safeway, Albertsons, and Kroger don't gain anything from this defeat.

Knight, my heart goes out to you guys. Keep fighting, if you can. What too many people don't get is that this will ultimately affect all of us--specifically, any of us who depend on our employers to pay at least a portion of our healthcare benefits.

Here's what makes me angriest--and I wrote the management at all 3 stores to talk about this--those three stores WASTED an opportunity to join forces and stand up in a very public way to the insurance companies and demand lower rates. A completely lost opportunity.

so this isn't an empty gesture for me. Albertsons is also an option for me, which I've never chosen in the past, and never will in the future because of this.

I used to spend about 95% of food dollar at Kroger, but stopped for other reasons.

(Wholefoods gets the bulk of my food dollar now, by the way).

It's is VITALY important that Americans support in every way possible good wages for people who work for a living. We have got to stop this upward, narrow redistribution of wealth on this increasingly steap pyramid.

Downward an outward for economic, cultural, political power should be our motto.

"Austin, Tex.-based Whole Foods Market Inc. no longer will have union representation in any of its 145 stores if employees at its Madison store have their way.

"After Madison employees presented a petition requesting removal of the union, Whole Foods withdrew recognition of the United Food and Commercial Workers as the exclusive bargaining representative for its Madison employees. Earlier this year, the Madison store became the company's only location to vote for union representation in Whole Foods' 23-year history....The National Labor Relations Board scheduled a Nov. 17 vote on the request. Madison employees then presented a second petition with enough signatures to bypass the vote.

"Following that action, the United Food and Commercial Workers filed charges of unfair labor practices against Whole Foods. The company says the claims are baseless and ultimately will be dismissed....However, Brian Romanowich, a union organizer for UFCW Local 1444 in Madison, says Whole Foods supervisors and employees didn't follow federal labor rules when collecting the signatures for the second petition. Romanowich declines to comment further because the case is being investigated by the NLRB...."

I haven't spent anything at Whole Foods for a long time either, because of their anti-union policy. As far as I'm concerned they are in the same category as Safeway and Albertsons. There are plenty of other natural foods stores, especially non-profit food co-ops, for there to be any reason to buy at Whole Foods.

whole foods is OUTRAGEOUSLY expensive. do they still keep the little bulletin board at the front of the store for customers to pin up notes? every time i've been in a whole foods the entire board was pinned with "why are you so damn expensive?!" you can find the same stuff at local independent health food stores, trader joes, mother's, etc. at much more reasonable prices. whole foods is just way beyond my budget.

i haven't set foot in any of the stores on strike since it started. albertson's is maybe one block away from me but i won't be shopping there anymore, will get everything done at stater bros., trader joes and wild oats. i hope everyone that left can find gainful employment.

Thanks for fighting the good fight. I wish you had posted happier news. So, should we all not shop at 'those stores'. I live in N. Cali and I mostly avoid them. I absolutely did not shop there when I visited So. Cal during the holidays.

I stopped shopping at Safeway, Albertsons, and Frys as soon as the strikes/lockouts started, and I WILL NEVER SPEND ANOTHER DIME THERE AGAIN.

I hope everyone will continue to spread the word and make those three companies pay dearly.

Fortunately locally we have an alternative, Bashas, that is strong on supporting liberal causes and Democratic candidates. And Costco is also a big Democratic donor. Then there are also farmers markets, food co-ops, etc. No reason to ever set foot inside a Safeway, Albertsons, or Frys again.

23. Is it of any help to know... that Krogers has, I believe, come to terms

with regional (Indiana) labors over similar issues? It looked like it was going to go into a show down such as your Westcoast and other midwestern areas. I think the impact on the companies elsewhere encouraged a quicker resolution on their contracts.

Hang tough. At least Krogers must be feeling some backlash - or they wouldn't be trying to avert additional actions. Not sure - but I think there is a hopeful sign in this.

Also saw a very long strike in Michigan (also involving Krogers) in the early nineties. Looked like the company was going on 'just fine' for several months. Hired scabs and kept open. But.. things couldn't have been going to well, because they finally went back to the table and gave much more than they had declared they were "able" ..

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